Corrections: September 10, 2017

Sept. 10, 2017

NATIONAL

A picture caption last Sunday with an article about the victims of Hurricane Harvey misstated the relationship between Belia and Manuel Saldivar and four children who were found dead with them after the storm. As the article correctly noted, the couple were the children’s great-grandparents, not their grandparents.

SPORTS

An article on Aug. 27 about the restoration of a tennis court where generations of African-American players got their start, using information from the Women’s Tennis Association website, misstated the ranking that one of those players, Leslie Allen, reached in 1983. She was No. 17, not No. 21.

REAL ESTATE

A chart last Sunday with the Calculator column, about increased ownership of rental units by institutional investors, mislabeled the percentages shown with vertical bars. The percentages were for the “Share of Rental Properties,” not the “Share of Rental Units.”

TRAVEL

An article on Sept. 3 about photography tours referred incorrectly to the type of camera used on a tour offered by andBeyond Kichwa Tembo Tented Camp. It is a camera equipped with a Nikon 600-millimeter lens, not a Nikon 600-millimeter camera. (There is no such camera.)

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The 36 Hours column on Aug. 27, about Brussels, misidentified the painter of “The Fall of the Rebel Angels,” which is on display at the Old Masters Museum there. The work is by Pieter Bruegel the Elder — not by his son Jan Bruegel the Elder.

BOOK REVIEW

The young adult hardcover best-seller list last Sunday erroneously included “Handbook for Mortals,” by Lani Sarem, as the No. 1 book in some editions. It did not meet the criteria for inclusion and was removed in later copies. Because of that error, the rankings of the other books were misstated. “The Hate U Give,” by Angie Thomas, should have been No. 1, not No. 2. The rest of the titles on the list should also have appeared one position higher, and “The Sun Is Also a Star,” by Nicola Yoon, should have been No. 10. The correct rankings can be found at nytimes.com/books.

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A review on Aug. 6 about “Poetry Will Save Your Life,” by Jill Bialosky, referred incorrectly to the author’s responsibilities at W. W. Norton & Company. She oversees the trade poetry list there, but she is not involved with the Norton anthologies.

SUNDAY BUSINESS

An Upshot article last Sunday about how an increase in outsourcing at large companies has fueled economic inequality misstated a measure of Apple’s job creation compared with Kodak’s decades ago. Apple has created tens of thousands of working-class jobs; it has not fallen short of matching Kodak in that regard. The article also misstated the amount of a wage increase that Marta Ramos, a janitor at Apple, received this year. Her raise was 60 cents an hour, to $16.60 hourly. It was not a dollar-an-hour raise.